UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations

UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations

UCLA UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title “Those who have been baptized, those who are believers in dios will transform [into animals]”: New Perspectives on Juan Teton, the Would-Be Nahua Messiah of Early Colonial Mexico Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2j51w72f Author Mendoza, Celso Armando Publication Date 2017 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles “Those who have been baptized, those who are believers in dios will transform [into animals]”: New Perspectives on Juan Teton, the Would-Be Nahua Messiah of Early Colonial Mexico A thesis submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Arts in Latin American Studies by Celso Armando Mendoza 2017 © Copyright by Celso Armando Mendoza 2017 ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS “Those who have been baptized, those who are believers in dios will transform [into animals]”: New Perspectives on Juan Teton, the Would-Be Nahua Messiah of Early Colonial Mexico by Celso Armando Mendoza Master of Arts in Latin American Studies University of California, Los Angeles, 2017 Professor Kevin B. Terraciano, Chair The 16th-century Nahuatl text, The Annals of Juan Bautista tells of the rise and fall of Juan Teton, the Nahua leader of an anti-Christian, millenarian indigenous movement. It includes his apocalyptic speech foretelling that Nahuas who ate meat from Spanish animals and believed in God would change into such animals. This passage is unique and invaluable, given that European-language accounts overwhelmingly dominate the historical record of indigenous resistance. In this thesis, I offer an all-new translation of the account, with notes on the Nahuatl used. I also compare Teton to similar indigenous leaders in colonial Mexico and beyond, ii allowing me to make inferences on his probable background and social status. I argue that the changes occurring in colonial Mexico, rather than Mesoamerican myth and legend, explain Teton's rise and the idiosyncratic aspects of his message. Finally, I show that the story of Juan Teton does not offer an example of the undue fatalism and superstition commonly ascribed to the Nahuas; I show instead that Nahua culture, contrary to prevalent depictions of it, was not particularly concerned with prophecies or auguries of doom. iii The thesis of Celso Armando Mendoza is approved. Pamela Munro Bonnie Taub Kevin B. Terraciano, Committee Chair University of California, Los Angeles 2017 iv To James Lockhart (1933 – 2014), who helped me gain admission to UCLA and to have faith in my abilities. Without him, all of this would have been literally impossible. “He gave me hope when hope was gone; he gave me strength to journey on.”– Les Miserables v TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 1 1. JUAN TETON COMPARED TO OTHER NAHUA “IDOLATERS” IN EARLY SIXTEENTH-CENTURY MEXICO 16 2. JUAN TETON AND OTHER NATIVE MESSIAHS BEYOND CENTRAL MEXICO 26 3. 16th-CENTURY MEXICO’S “PLAGUE OF SHEEP (AND COWS)” AND THE ROOTS OF JUAN TETON’S MOVEMENT 40 4. EVIDENCE OF NAHUA FATALISM? 48 5. PHRASES AND TERMS OF INTEREST FROM THE PASSAGE 55 6. TRANSLATION OF THE PASSAGE 62 7. BIBLIOGRAPHY 74 vi LIST OF FIGURES 1. MAP OF CENTRAL MEXICO AND THE ALTEPETL INVOLVED WITH JUAN TETON 3 vii Introduction One of the more bizarre and fascinating entries in the Annals of Juan Bautista is the author’s account of the failed millenarian movement of one Juan Teton1 that took place in 1558. Supposedly only a macehualtzintli, a “poor commoner” from Michmaloyan in the Mezquital Valley (today known as Michimaloya, in Tula de Allende, Hidalgo) he called on his fellow Nahuas to reject Catholicism and cast away several objects introduced by Spaniards – particularly meats and clothing made from European farm animals – in order to survive a coming apocalypse. He washed away the baptisms of his followers through his own purification rituals. According to Teton’s lengthy, urgent speech, those who persisted in consuming these products recently brought by Spaniards, and who refused to renounce Christianity and have their baptisms removed, would transform into livestock. Demons (tzitzimimeh) were to subsequently emerge and consume most of those who had not heeded Teton’s words. Drought and famine would ensue. Surviving on wild plants and native foodstuffs that they had hoarded, Teton and his followers would found a new settlement where they would take refuge, while the few survivors outside his group would gradually destroy themselves through war and starvation. Those in Teton’s movement thus counted on inheriting a purified new world, refreshed and cleansed of Spaniards and their corrupting foreign culture through an apocalypse. They would usher in a new age where the Nahuas would retain their traditional religious beliefs and ways. This was all to take place on the Nahua holiday of Toxiuhmolpiliz, the Binding of the Years, which marked the end of a 52-year count in the traditional Mesoamerican calendar, and the beginning of a new one. This date, which always fell on the day 1-Rabbit, purportedly had the “greatest cosmic and ritual significance” to the Nahuas.2 Nahua lore associated it not only with the creation of the universe, but also disaster: according to Nahua historical accounts, a 1 terrifying famine broke out on 1-Rabbit in 1554 during the reign of Moteuczoma I.3 It was on this uncertain, frightful day that, as Teton reminded his followers, their ancestors in preconquest times believed demons would roam the earth and unfortunate humans would transform into animals. The last toxiuhmolpiliz, occurred in 1506. The next one was due in 1558, the year when Teton's movement began. There was thus little time for Teton and his followers. To show that his claims were not empty, Teton cited the example of one altepetl (a Nahua community and political unit, akin to a town or city; the word is always in the singular), Xallatlauhco (contemporary Xalatlaco, State of Mexico) in the Toluca Valley, whose residents had not followed such precautions and had thus transformed into cows; don Alonso, his children, and the leaders, however, had turned into their Spanish leather capes and hats. He achieved an apparently impressive following in two altepetl, Coatepec and Atlapolco also in the Toluca Valley southwest of the Valley of Mexico (modern-day Coatepec Harinas and San Pedro Atlapulco in the state of Mexico, respectively), which included the prominent leaders of the two communities. Teton’s movement met a swift end when he and his followers were making their way through Xallatlauhco; in all likelihood, he had led them there so they could see first-hand those who had turned into cows and thereby witness the consequences of ignoring his warnings. There they caught the attention of Spanish authorities, probably because of someone on the inside, perhaps a follower with second thoughts or a faithful Catholic Nahua who had friends or family involved, alerted a local priest, father Pedro Hernández. Officials arrested them and sent them to Mexico City to be put on trial before the Archbishop of Mexico, Alonso de Montúfar (in office from 1551 to 1572). The archbishop sentenced Juan Teton and his followers to be whipped and have their heads shaved, and Teton himself was banished. 2 ● Mexico City/Tenochtitlan Figure 1 A map of the Valley of Mexico in colonial times and the surrounding area. It shows the ethnic affiliation and the locations of the four altepetl involved in the entry, relative to other important altepetl and Nahua ethnic groupings: Michmaloyan, home altepetl of Juan Teton, Atlapolco and Coatepec where he cultivated a following, and Xallatlauhco, whose residents supposedly turned into cows, all Tepaneca altepetl. Map drawn by Billie Sajdera, based on a map from page 14 of Charles Gibson’s The Aztecs Under Spanish Rule (1964). 3 The story caught the attention of the indigenous authors of the 16th-century Nahuatl text, the so-called Annals of Juan Bautista (none of whom were named Juan Bautista), who recorded the whole ordeal as related above. It can be found on folios 8r through 9r, in the manuscript held in the Lorenzo Boturini library in the Basilica of the Virgin of Guadalupe in Mexico City; this manuscript is undoubtedly a copy prepared from the original text in 1582 or some time after, likely by someone who was not one of the original authors.4 It is only because of their decision to set down Teton's deeds and words to paper that we even know of him; no other known records of Teton or his activities exist.5 The authors of those annals, from the neighborhood of Moyotlan in Mexico City/Tenochtitlan where Teton’s trial occurred, probably knew about Teton because they translated his testimony and recorded it for the courts. They were painters, we know for sure, and there were close linkages in Nahua society between painting and writing (the Nahuas used the same verb for both, ihcuiloa). According to James Lockhart, they were probably notaries and painters, and thus tlahcuilohqueh ‘painters or writers’ “in a very broad sense.”6 They were also relatively familiar with Spanish culture, having doubtlessly been close to a friar, and must have had important connections to Mexico City politics. They were certainly in the position to be called upon by Spanish courts to function as translators and stenographers for cases involving indigenous people. Moreover, they had an uncanny inclination towards preserving verbatim speech, to an extent unlike any other Nahua writers, and in their annals, included other courtroom scenes, a further suggestion that they lent their services to courts. 7 4 There is unlikely any other way they were familiar with Teton's speech. His activities were largely concentrated in an area well outside the Valley of Mexico, relatively far from Mexico City, where they were based.

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